The LA Galaxy will not, we know now, begin 2013 in that wildly deflated, almost shockingly poor way they launched 2012.
The champs began their three-peat quest with a commanding 4-0 win over visiting and surprisingly tame Chicago on Sunday at the Home Depot Center.
Mike Magee?s hat trick powered the home team?s win, while the Galaxy midfield and defense had a comfortable afternoon, keeping debuting goalkeeper Carlo Cudicini from extending himself more than once.
Man of the Match
The Galaxy will need a little more of what Mike Magee gave them Sunday, supplying his side?s first three goals in a performance that will almost surely net the underrated veteran (and fifth-year Galaxy man) an opening weekend MLS Player of the Week award. With Landon Donovan still on hiatus and David Beckham?s replacement still just a gleam in the AEG eye, players rising the way Magee did Sunday will be pure Galaxy gold.
(MORE: Highlights package, with Magee?s hat trick)
Threesome of knowledge: what we learned
- Chicago can go ahead and start the season. Anytime now.
Playing on the sacrificial road lamb for the champs to begin 2013 isn?t the easiest of assignments, clearly. Still, the Fire needs more. And in a hurry.
It?s not just the final score. (Which could have been worse, by the way, but for Sean Johnson?s busy, steady work in Chicago goal.)
The marking was jayvee on LA?s first goal, which had been coming. But the defending, ironically, wasn?t even Chicago?s larger issue. Rather, nobody in an advanced position for the visitors did a darn thing.
Maicon Santos missed a wonderful chance, an uncontested first-half header from eight yards that he left wide. If Santos, on his third club in three years, ever wants to stick as a starting striker, that ball must fly in.
Patrick Nyarko was contained on the right. And Chris Rolfe, the attacking midfielder in Frank Klopas? 4-2-3-1, simply must find more ways to influence the game.
Dilly Duka along the left was OK for Chicago.
- Robbie Keane is doing fine, thank you
It seemed logical to assume that LA Galaxy striker Robbie Keane would be OK in the 2013 early going. But you never know until you know.
Sure enough, the Irish international had lots of hop and pop, just as he did late last year when Keane was Major League Soccer?s top striker over the season?s last 2-3 months. Today, like then, it?s that wise movement off the ball as much as the outright shooting and scoring that counts with Keane.
Then again, he did plenty on the score sheet, too, with a goal and an assist in Sunday?s romp-and-stomp for the champs.
- What of free kicks and corner kicks for LA?
If you?re interested, Juninho took the first free kick for Los Angeles in what we would have known previously around the Home Depot Center as ?David Beckham time.?
With no Beckham, and with the club?s second choice dead ball delivery man weeks from getting back on the field (Landon Donovan, that is), expect the quality chances to shrink on free kicks and corner kicks. Yes, Beckham did that very, very well.
That?s a shame, too, for the champs; Omar Gonzalez is a mighty juicy target for the player who can aim those things precisely.
Packaged for take-away
- Fire center back Arne Friedrich, the German veteran, was held out as a precaution while still dealing with an injury.
- Sherjill MacDonald was on the bench to start for Chicago. Not to pick on Santos, but if MacDonald cannot beat out the journeyman forward on opening day, this is a pretty big problem already around Toyota Park.
- It looks like the way Klopas wants the 4-2-3-1 to work is with Jeff Larentowicz holding dependably while Joel Lindpere does more of the two-way work.
- Debuting Galaxy goalkeeper Carlo Cudicini made an absolute mess of a 32nd minute situation, handing a ball to Rolfe about 30 yards out. An in-form Rolfe would have scored. But Chicago?s top attacker is such a streaky sort, as we know. So the not-in-form Rolfe drove himself into a bad angle and then left his rolling shot just wide of the far post.
- Best one-on-one combat of the afternoon: Galaxy right back A.J. De La Garza and Dilly Duka.
- Another nice, ongoing battle Sunday: Galaxy left midfielder Colin Clark vs. Fire right back Jalil Anibaba.
- Referee Kevin Stott missed a PK early in second half, when Fire center back Austin Berry got a handful of Keane?s jersey, although the Irishman did go down a bit easy. Tough call for Stott, in all honesty.
Source: http://prosoccertalk.nbcsports.com/2013/03/03/drilling-down-on-l-a-galaxy-4-chicago-fire-0/related/
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